In “The Great Gatsby” Daisy Buchanan is the housewife of Tom Buchanan. Daisy and Tom live in a society where women are suppressed and people live by the idea that “the best thing a girl can be in this world [is] a beautiful little fool" (Gatsby, 21). Daisy allows her husband, Tom, to have an affair, but when Tom finds out that Daisy was with Jay Gatsby he realizes that Daisy is equivalent to Tom in her actions and “if that's the idea” of what society has come to then Tom wants to be “[counted] out” (Gatsby, 124). Evidently, In Toms eyes, as well as the rest of society, men and women have different standards and values.
Daisy treated
Additionally, Daisy’s character is objectified. Daisy is portrayed as a fragile woman who needs a man by her side. Daisy stays home alone until Tom comes home to join her again; this inability to be independent keeps Daisy from growing or developing to be anything besides a housewife. Antithetically, Jordan Baker illustrates “exhibition of complete self-sufficiency [and this] draws a stunned tribute [from Nick Caraway] (Fitzgerald, 132). Jordan is a successful woman who shows the positivity of women being independent.
Similarly, the harm of women in a world without feminism is evident by the way that Tom treats his wife, Daisy and his mistress, Myrtle. When Tom gets into a fight with Myrtle, Myrtle tries to stand up for herself against Tom but when she does, Tom “[breaks] her nose with his open hand”(Fitzgerald, 125). Tom is allowed to treat Myrtle and Daisy however he chooses is fit and both women accept Tom’s behavior. The